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North Adams Housing Authority Still Waiting on Sun Cleaners

By Jack GuerinoiBerkshires Staff
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The Board of Commissioners made a pro forma vote to ratify Jennifer Hohn's annual contract. 
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — The Housing Authority is still waiting on the Sun Cleaners contamination report that is reportedly now 85 percent complete.
 
Per usual, Housing Authority Executive Director Jennifer Hohn had little new news about the status of old dry cleaning location and told the Board of Commissioners on Monday that the ball is now completely in engineers Tighe & Bond's court.
 
"My hands are tied so it is all on Tighe & Bond," Hohn said.
 
The board, which also serves as Housing Opportunities Inc. board, plans to transfer all the HOI assets to the city of North Adams and dissolve the 30-year-old program created to help first-time homeowners.
 
The property at 111 River St. has been the last — and the longest — roadblock in the way of dissolving HOI. Some two years ago, the city was unwilling to accept this single last property without testing the property for contaminants.
 
Multiple testings were needed and as of June, the testing had been completed and it was a matter of waiting for the report.
 
Hohn said according to email correspondence, the person who handled all of the fieldwork for the testing is no longer with the company so there has been some delays. 
 
She did note that the email stated the report is 85 percent done. Once complete it will be handed over to the city.
 
Hohn said she hopes HOI is dissolved before the Housing Authority completes its Rental Assistance Demonstration, which will allow the authority to move its units to the Section 8 platform.
 
The process is going smoothly but the director said they have to close out liens before final acceptance.
 
"We can't have any liens against any of our facilities at the time of closing. We knew we would have to deal with this," she said. "But everything is going very well we haven't run into any other issues." 
 
There is currently an environmental performance contract loan from seven years ago that has to be paid off. Hohn said she would have more information next month.
 
She also said her contract automatically renewed July 1, as it does every year unless the board intervenes and that it carried a 2.9 percent increase per federal regulations.
 
The contract allows for an evaluation but she noted that the board typically has not done this because it has had so much turnover.
 
Hohn recommended that if the board wanted to conduct a performance survey, it should hire an outside firm. However,  the commissioners agreed that it would not be necessary. 
 
"I look at the numbers and the high performing and all that the staff does and all that Jennifer does," Chairman James Neville said. "It is all on paper and it speaks for itself."
 
The board did vote to renew the contract as a matter of procedure.

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RFP Ready for North County High School Study

By Tammy Daniels iBerkshires Staff
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — The working group for the Northern Berkshire Educational Collaborative last week approved a request for proposals to study secondary education regional models.
 
The members on Tuesday fine-tuned the RFP and set a date of Tuesday, Jan. 20, at 4 p.m. to submit bids. The bids must be paper documents and will be accepted at the Northern Berkshire School Union offices on Union Street.
 
Some members had penned in the first week of January but Timothy Callahan, superintendent for the North Adams schools, thought that wasn't enough time, especially over the holidays.
 
"I think that's too short of a window if you really want bids," he said. "This is a pretty substantial topic."
 
That topic is to look at the high school education models in North County and make recommendations to a collaboration between Hoosac Valley Regional and Mount Greylock Regional School Districts, the North Adams Public Schools and the town school districts making up the Northern Berkshire School Union. 
 
The study is being driven by rising costs and dropping enrollment among the three high schools. NBSU's elementary schools go up to Grade 6 or 8 and tuition their students into the local high schools. 
 
The feasibility study of a possible consolidation or collaboration in Grades 7 through 12 is being funded through a $100,000 earmark from the Fair Share Act and is expected to look at academics, faculty, transportation, legal and governance issues, and finances, among other areas. 
 
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